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The Soul of Carl Jung

Modern Man in Search of a Soul

Carl Jung Education

The following is a list of Jungian institutes, societies, centers and organizations that provide excellent Jungian education, Jungian resources, Jungian seminars and Jungian workshops advancing the work of Carl Jung.

 

 

Jungian Institutes

Center for Story and Symbol

www.folkstory.com

Central Indiana Friends of Jung

www.cifoj.org

C.G. Jung Center

www.cgjungcenter.org

C.G. Jung Club of Orange County, CA

www.junginoc.org

C.G. Jung Foundation of Ontario

www.cgjungontario.com

C.G. Jung Institute of Boston

www.cgjungboston.com

CG Jung Institute of Chicago

www.jungchicago.org

C.G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles

www.junginla.org

C.G. Jung Institute of New York

www.junginstitute.org

CG Jung Institute of Pittsburgh

www.pghjung.org/institute.html

C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco

www.sfjung.org

C.G. Jung Institute of Zürich

www.junginstitut.ch

C.G. Jung Society of Atlanta

www.jungatlanta.com

C.G. Jung Society of Colorado

www.jungsocietyofcolorado.org

C.G. Jung Society of Sarasota

www.cgjungsarasota.org

C.G. Jung Society of Seattle

www.eskimo.com

C.G. Jung Society of Vancouver

www.jungvancouver.org

Charleston Jung Society

www.charlestonjungsociety.org

International School of Analytical Psychology

www.isapzurich.com

Jung Center of Central Florida

www.jungcenter.com

Jung Institute of Dallas

www.cgjungpage.org/dallasinst.html

Jung Society of Austin

www.jungsociety.com

Jung Society Waco

www.jungwaco.org

Minnesota Jung Association

www.minnesotajung.org

New Mexico Society of Jungian Analysts

www.santafejung.org

New York Association for Analytic Psychology

www.nyaap.org

Primary Sidebar

JUNGIAN TERMINOLOGY

Active imagination: A method of assimilating unconscious contents through some form of self-expression.

Anima: The inner feminine side of a man.

Animus: The inner masculine side of a woman.

Archetype: Primordial, structural elements of the human psyche.

Assimilation: The process of integrating outer objects and unconscious contents into consciousness.

Collective Unconscious: A structural layer of the human psyche containing inherited elements, distinct from the personal unconscious.

Consciousness: The function or activity which maintains the relation of psychic contents to the ego.

Ego: The central complex in the field of consciousness.

Enantiodromia: The emergence of the unconscious opposite in the course of time.

Individuation: A process of psychological differentiation, having for its goal the development of the individual personality.

Inflation: A state of mind characterized by an exaggerated sense of self-importance, often compensated by feelings of inferiority.

Jungian Analysis: A form of therapy aimed at bringing unconscious contents to consciousness.

Myth: An involuntary collective statement based on an unconscious psychic experience.

Neurosis: A psychological crisis due to a state of disunity with oneself.

Projection: An automatic process whereby contents of one’s own unconscious are perceived to be in others.

Psyche: The totality of all psychological processes, both conscious and unconscious.

Psychosis. An extreme dissociation of the personality due to the activity of unconscious complexes that are completely disconnected from consciousness.

Self: The archetype of wholeness and the regulating center of the psyche.

Shadow: Hidden or unconscious aspects of oneself which the ego has either repressed or never recognized.

Spirit: An archetype and a functional complex, often personified and experienced as enlivening.

Symbol: The best possible expression for something unknown.

Synchronicity: A phenomenon where an event in the outside world coincides meaningfully with a psychological state of mind.

Transcendent function: A psychic function that arises from the tension between consciousness and the unconscious and supports their union.

Unconscious: The totality of all psychic phenomena that lack the quality of consciousness.

Wholeness. A state in which consciousness and the unconscious work together in harmony.

From Daryl Sharp’s Jung Lexicon

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